Source: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (PA)
Copyright: 1998 PG Publishing
Pubdate: Mon, 7 Dec 1998
Contact:  http://www.post-gazette.com/
Author: Bill Moushey, Post-Gazette Staff Writer
Note: This is the eighth of a 10 part series, "Win At All Costs" being
published in the Post-Gazette.  The part is composed of five items (posted
separately).  The series is also being printed in The Blade, Toledo, OH
email: GOVERNMENT GOES BACK ON A DEAL

In June 1989, Alberto San Pedro struck a deal with federal agents to avoid
what would likely have been life in prison for smuggling cocaine.

The deal was this: The government would release him from a state prison
sentence he was about to complete, then he would go undercover to snag the
mayor and a commissioner of Hialeah, Fla., who were involved in an
influence-peddling scam. In return, he would be granted immunity from the
new drug trafficking charges and any other crimes committed to date, and
freed from prison.

He was successful. The mayor was convicted in the scam, the commissioner
pleaded guilty and San Pedro’s cooperation was lauded by federal
prosecutors as "substantial, truthful and invaluable."

San Pedro went back to prison to await his imminent release.

But by then, another set of federal agents and prosecutors from South
Florida, working another case, had linked San Pedro to several drug-related
crimes from years before, ranging from homicide to extortion.

Since San Pedro had been guaranteed immunity for all of his crimes, it
appeared the agents were out of luck.

But not quite. Since immunity deals require a defendant’s complete and
truthful testimony, the agents scoured transcripts of San Pedro’s grand
jury testimony in the Hialeah cases.

Based on minor discrepancies between grand jury testimony and his testimony
in court, they charged him with seven counts of perjury, figuring that
would also eventually allow them to charge him with the other crimes.

In fact, within a month, San Pedro also found his name in a federal
racketeering indictment, which court papers say was approved by then U.S.
Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, who had been briefed on the entire chain
of events.

But in 1991, a judge dismissed four of the perjury counts and a jury
acquitted him on the remaining three. Now the government was hamstrung:
Despite its best efforts, San Pedro had upheld his end of the immunity
agreement.

Yet federal prosecutors continued to press racketeering charges against him
and fight his release on bond, keeping him in prison for another five years.

In 1996, more than seven years after the deal was struck, U.S. District
Judge Jose Gonzalez Jr. finally ruled the government was bound by its
initial agreement and dismissed all of the remaining charges against San
Pedro, setting him free.

"In a day when the confidence and trust of the American people in their
government ebbs, it is critical that the United States government keep its
word and live up to its obligations," Gonzalez wrote. "If doing so means
that it must forego convicting one person of a crime, that is a small price
to pay to preserve the integrity of our institutions." 
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Checked-by: Richard Lake